Showing posts with label civil rights. Show all posts
Showing posts with label civil rights. Show all posts

Sunday, July 12, 2015

"Ears to Hear, Eyes to See." A sermon on Amos 7:7-15; Mark 6:14-29; and Psalm 85, from Littlefield Presbyterian Church. Preached on July 12, 2015. This was an observance of the Week of Righteous Resistance, as we stand for racial justice and in solidarity with our African-American brothers and sisters whose churches have been burned. We received a special offering to donate to rebuilding..




    
The gospel lesson we just heard is part of a long story, that’s told partly in flashback.  The scene is suspenseful and as grisly as anything you’d see on television.  It’s really unlike anything else in Mark’s account of the good news, and it seems sort of out of place. 
            So it might make us wonder why Mark tells this story at all.  As David Lose points out, later evangelists must have asked the same question, because Matthew shortens it considerably and Luke leaves it out.[1]
            I think Mark was trying to show a contrast between the two kinds of kingdoms available to Jesus’ disciples—then and ever since.   Mark has placed this story just after Jesus has commissioned his disciples to take up the work of the kingdom of God and when he joins them in making that kingdom more tangible and real than they might have imagined.
            Herod’s Kingdom—the kingdom of the world—is dominated by the will to power.  This is the world of competition, fear and envy … the world we see on the evening news.
            How different the kingdom of this world is to the kingdom of God.  Jesus sends his disciples out in vulnerability, dependent on the grace and hospitality of others, to bring healing and mercy, with no expectation of worldly reward or recognition or gain.  
            Mark seems to be putting a choice before us: which kind of kingdom do we belong to and want to live into? 
           
            We have prophetic figures in both of our scripture passages today:  Amos and John the Baptist.    God calls Amos to leave his home in the land of Judah and prophesy to the rebellious people of Israel.  John is beheaded.   So this isn’t exactly Prophet Appreciation Sunday.  But then, God’s prophets don’t tend to get a lot of appreciation.  I think that’s because they bring messages that are hard to hear.   They bring judgment. 
            Amos sees a wall build with a plumb line.  A plumb line, as I understand it, functions to keep the wall vertically straight during construction.  The heavy lead at the end of the string judges how the wall is measuring up and helps to maintain the integrity of the building by providing a vertical reference point.[2]
            God is setting a religious and ethical plumb line in the midst of the kingdom of Israel to see how they stand, and they fail to measure up.  They’re not upright.  
            These words are hard for a lot of people to hear.  There are always people who want to silence a prophetic word from the Lord, to protect the status quo…  to protect the systems of power and privilege… to protect previously held and cherished beliefs.  Judgment is hard to hear.

            In the weeks since the massacre of 9 people at Emanuel AME Church, some of us have been thinking and talking a lot about race relations in our country.
            Whether the six African-American churches that have been burned since then are determined to be arsons or even hate crimes, when a black church burns—a half century after the Jim Crow era—it brings back troubling memories.
            It wasn’t so long ago that there were a rash of hate crimes directed at black churches.  Since at least 1822, when the first recorded burning of a black church occurred in South Carolina, church arson has been a default response of racists frustrated with progress on civil rights.
            Churches played a critical role in the civil rights movement and were targeted overtly.   One of the most heinous church attacks was that of 16th Street Baptist Church where four little girls were killed in a 1963 bombing while getting ready for Sunday school.       Torching churches such as Mount Zion persisted decades after the passage of the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act,  100 years after Booker T. Washington dined at the White House and 150 years after the end of the Civil War.[3]
            I know this is hard to hear for a lot of people… hard to think about.   A lot of us would rather not think about it.  For white people, it’s a sign of privilege that we don’t have to think about race every single day, or with the same kind of urgency as people of color.
            But I think God is calling us to a greater righteousness.   Our nation is still under construction, struggling to live more fully into a society where there is liberty and justice for all. 
            As people of faith, we continue to be challenged by God’s vision for us, the kingdom of God—if we have ears to hear.  Prophetic voices keep bringing God’s word to us.  They keep holding up God’s plumb line to our life together and calling us to greater faithfulness and righteousness. 

            To some people, it may seem like a hopeless cause.   But I believe the time is ripe for change.  And I believe nothing is impossible for God. 
            Today, I think many people in our society truly are against racism    and really long to live in a nation in which we have justice for all.  Throughout the 1700’s, many people were against slavery—in theory.  But a concerted, large-scale movement to end slavery seemed out of reach.             

            On New Year’s Day, 1773, in a small church in a market town outside of London, the congregation gathered for worship.  The pastor rose to preach, and began with a poem he had written to describe his conversion experience 25 years earlier—a poem we sang today.
            Amazing grace, how sweet the sound,

            That saved a wretch like me!

            I once was lost, but now am found.

            Was blind, but now I see.


            The preacher, John Newton, had been the captain of a slave ship.  While crossing the Atlantic on his way home, he and his crew encountered a terrible storm.  Assuming all was lost, the captain of the ship cried out, “Lord, have mercy on us!”
            They survived.  It was May 10, 1748.   John Newton never forgot that moment for the rest of his life. 
            For Newton, this initial conversion experience came suddenly and clearly.  One moment he was blind to the presence of God.  The next he could see.   For the rest of his life John Newton observed the anniversary of May 10, 1748 as the day of his conversion, a day when he subjected his will to a higher power.
            There are various versions of the story of John Newton’s conversion.   Some tell a story of how Newton’s life was so changed that he turned the slave ship around and sailed back to Africa and set the captives free.  Some tell how humanely Newton treated the slaves on the ship.
            The truth is,  at that point and for many years afterward, Newton was captive to his culture’s understanding of slavery.  Slaves were seen not as persons—but as property…  as cargo on a ship. 
            Newton continued to see his work in the slave trade as what he described as a “creditable way of life.”  He valued the time he had at sea to study the Bible.   On his voyages, while slaves were lying in shackles below them, Newton gathered his crew on deck for prayer,   “according to the liturgy…officiating myself.”[4]
            Looking back, Newton wrote:  “During the time I was engaged in the slave-trade, I never had the least scruple as to its lawfulness.  I was upon the whole satisfied with it, as the appointment Providence had marked out for me….   It is indeed accounted a genteel employment, and is usually very profitable.”[5]
            Newton continued to make his living in the slave trade for some years.  His last voyage on a slave ship was in 1953-54—six years after his conversion during the storm.  After leaving the sea, he eventually studied for the priesthood.  He was ordained a priest in the Church of England in 1764 and,  over time, gained a reputation for being a powerful preacher.
            During these years, Newton’s mind and his religious faith were focused not on changing the social order of his world, but its spiritual life.   He had come under the influence of the Evangelical movement.          
            To the Evangelicals of 18th century England, theirs was a nation that had lost its moral bearings.  There was widespread alcoholism and prostitution.
            Evangelicals advocated studying the Bible,  frequent prayer, and rigorously keeping the Sabbath.  They disapproved of theatrical plays, gambling, most dancing, and pubs. 
            At that time, most people in Great Britain were convinced that the British Empire’s economy would collapse if slavery were abolished.  They couldn’t imagine the Empire without slavery.  They didn’t really see how their faith was a reason to oppose slavery.
            For fifty years, William Wilberforce and other activists, including the Quakers worked to end slavery in the British Empire.  
As for the preacher John Newton:  in around 1772, he wrote the words for “Amazing Grace.”  But it wasn’t until 8 years later, in 1780,  that he began to express regrets about his part in the slave trade--  thirty-two years after his conversion.
            In 1785 he began to speak out openly against slavery.  He wrote a pamphlet that was widely read, and he testified in court about the evils of the slave trade.  He continued to speak out until his death in 1807.
            Finally, in 1833, the House of Commons passed a bill abolishing slavery. 
            In 19th-century America, religious revivalism was linked directly with the abolition of slavery and movements of social reform.  Christians helped lead the abolitionist struggle, efforts to end child labor, projects to aid working people and establish unions, and the battle to obtain voting rights for women.  Evangelical Christians fought for social causes.  For Evangelical Christian evangelists and leaders like Charles Finney, the gospel and the cause of working against slavery went together.
            Change can be hard.   Change can be slow.  But the church has done amazing things in the past—things that transformed the society.  
            When we have ears to hear… when we have eyes to see—God can use us.   The Psalmist sings of this promise:

            When we pray, “Show us your steadfast love, O LORD,
            and grant us your salvation.
Let us hear what God the LORD will speak;
For he will speak peace to God’s faithful,
To those who turn to God in their hearts…
Steadfast love and faithfulness will meet;
Righteousness and peace will kiss each other…
The Lord will give what is good,
And our land will yield its increase.
Righteousness will go before the LORD
And will make a path for God’s steps.[6]

May it be so!


[1] David Lose, “A Tale of Two Kingdoms” at In the Meantime, at http://www.davidlose.net/2015/07/pentecost-7-b-a-tale-of-two-kingdoms/

[2] Since my construction knowledge is limited, I am grateful to Tyler Mayfield for his explanation, at the Working Preacher.  https://www.workingpreacher.org/preaching.aspx?commentary_id=2487

[4] Adam Hochschild, Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an Empire’s Slaves (Mariner/Houghton Mifflin, 2005), pp. 71-75.
[5] Ibid., p. 71.
[6] Psalm 85

Monday, June 29, 2015

Why I Am an Ally: A Personal Reflection. Why I care.




“Whoever does not love does not know God, for God is love.”[1]

            The past few weeks have been an emotional roller coaster for me, and for a lot of people, in terms of what’s going on in our nation and the world.  I have been mourning the loss of nine lives of African-Americans while they were studying the Bible and praying together at Emanuel AME Church in Charleston, SC.   Last Friday the Supreme Court ruled that it is legal for all Americans to marry the people they love, regardless of their gender or sexual orientation.   We’re also learning that  at least 5 predominately black  churches have  been burned in the past week or so, with at least 3 determined to be arson..  This has all affected me deeply.
            I think it’s important to understand the particular sensitivities and passions that are a part of who we are as persons.  So I’ve given this a lot of thought.  As I was growing up in rural Pennsylvania, a variety of influences worked together to instill in me a strong sense of fairness and compassion.  In the early 1970’s, I married an African-American man, which would have been a felony in some states until 1967 when the Supreme Court ruled that restricting the freedom to marry solely on the basis of race violates the central meaning of equal protection under the law.  My son is biracial and identifies as African-American.  I have family and friends and brothers and sisters in the Christian faith who are persons of color.  Because I care about people whose everyday lives are impacted by prejudice and injustice, I need to care about this. 
            I have family members who are gay.  There is deep pain,  sadness and regret over a broken relationship. Loving parents lost a beloved child over words that were said years ago.  
            Over the years I have become friends with LGBTQ persons.  I have heard their stories and have come to appreciate their paths to self-acceptance and understanding and living with integrity, as who they were created to be.    Because of my growing awareness, I am very intentional when I choose words.  I say “sexual orientation” rather “sexual preference” or “lifestyle choice” to reflect my understanding that they do not choose to be attracted to persons of the same gender, any more than I could choose to be attracted to another woman. 
            I have known a number of LGBTQ persons who have been in long-term, committed, mutually fulfilling relationships.  A  former neighbor was the first person to cross the street and welcome me to the neighborhood when I moved here. He and his partner were fairly private, but casual conversations gave me insights into their life together, as an older couple who had been together for several decades.  When he was diagnosed with cancer, his partner cared for him throughout his illness until he died, as any loving spouse would. 
            I am privileged to have LGBTQ friends who are persons of faith.  Some of them are among the kindest, most loving and compassionate, gentle persons I know.  All of them are like all  the rest of us humans, with individual strengths and weaknesses and quirks.  Their sexual orientation or identification is just one part of who they are.
            Since moving to Dearborn 18 years ago, I have been involved with interfaith work and have become friends with people in the Muslim and Arab-American communities.  I live in east Dearborn, so my relationships with neighbors are interfaith as well.  I am grateful for the relationships I have in the community, for the graciousness and hospitality I have experienced.  Because they are my friends and neighbors and colleagues, I need to care about them.
            In my training to be a chaplain and a pastor, one of the questions I was taught to ask is “Where is God in this?”  Another is, “What kind of a God do we worship?”
            As a Christian, I see myself as a follower of Jesus, who I believe “came to live among us, full of grace and truth.”[2]  Near the beginning of his ministry, Jesus went to the synagogue on the Sabbath and was given the scroll of Isaiah, and he read, “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor.  He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to let the oppressed go free, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor.’ He rolled up the scroll… and began to say to them, ‘Today this scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”[3]  With many others, I regard this as Jesus’ mission statement, one that guides my sense of mission.
            Jesus made it clear what is most important for those who follow him.  People came to Jesus and asked him, “What is the greatest commandment in the Law?” Jesus answered, ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ And a second is like it: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’ On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.”[4]  In a related passage in the gospel according to Luke, a lawyer wants to justify himself, so he asks Jesus, “Who is my neighbor?”  Jesus responds by telling the parable of the good Samaritan, in which the person seen by society as unacceptable is held up as an example of a good neighbor.[5]
            I see practicing unconditional love as one of the most important parts of my life of faith, and it is a test of my faith:  “Those who say, ‘I love God,’ and hate their brothers or sisters, are liars, for those who do not love a brother or sister whom they have seen, cannot love God whom they have not seen. Those who love God must love their brothers and sisters also.”[6]

            So why am I an ally to those who are marginalized or oppressed?  Partly because I care about people I know.  But the main reason is because it is an integral part of my faith.   I believe my Christian faith calls me to love and respect each person I meet as a child of God.  God created them and loves them, and I need to love them too—even if I don’t think they’re very likeable, even if I feel uncomfortable around them, even if they make choices that are different from mine, even if they are bigots.  My faith teaches me that it is not my job to judge.
            As a white person, I need to care about systemic racism in our society.  I need to care enough to commit myself to do what I can to change things. 
            As a follower of Jesus, who reached out in love to those who were considered sinners or outcasts in society, I need to care about those in our society whom some others may judge as sinners. 
            As a person of faith committed to promoting greater understanding and cooperation between people who are different, I need to do what I can to combat prejudice and stereotyping. 
            In the upcoming political campaign cycle, there are sure to be candidates who try to gain votes by promoting divisiveness and fear of various groups.  This is a time of significant changes in our society, and people who think they can promote their agenda by exploiting peoples’ fears will surely do so.  We’ll all hear rhetoric about how we need to fear the loss of religious liberty and about Muslim terrorists in our communities.   I am committed to do what I can by sharing accurate information and thoughtful reflections. 
            In this time when so much is changing, a lot of us will be struggling.  Change is hard.  We won’t all agree about everything.   But we can all commit ourselves to be respectful  and constructive, as we work together to build a society in whch we have “liberty and justice for all.”

            As Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said, “We must learn to live together as brothers [and sisters] or perish together as fools."

Fran Hayes
June 29, 2015





[1] 1 John 4:8
[2] John 1:14
[3] Luke 4:16-21.  This is a quote from Isaiah 61.
[4] Matthew 22:34-40; also Mark 12:28-34.
[5] Luke 10:25-37
[6] 1 John 4:20-21.